Sacramento Clears Self-Governed Homeless Camp, Ending a Pilot Program Once Seen as a Model

The eviction comes after camp organizers refused attempts to inspect the site, a former vehicle maintenance yard.
Sacramento Clears Self-Governed Homeless Camp, Ending a Pilot Program Once Seen as a Model
Camp Resolution, a county-authorized homeless camp in Sacramento, as seen on June 17, 2024. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times
Rudy Blalock
Updated:

A pilot program to test out a self-governed and city-sanctioned homeless encampment as a stepping stone to permanent housing has ended in Sacramento, with the city ordering on Aug. 26 that it be removed.

The so-called Camp Resolution had an estimated 48 occupants living in trailers before it was cleared, according to a city statement.

The city leased the land to the nonprofit Safe Ground Sacramento in March 2023 under an agreement that automatically renewed every 120 days. The nonprofit didn’t renew the lease earlier this month.

The city first received permission for homeless people to live at the former dumpsite and vehicle maintenance yard in 2022 from the California Water Quality Control Board, which had restricted the land from residential use because of cancer-causing chemicals beneath the surface.

The eviction comes after camp organizers denied attempts by the water board and the Sacramento Fire Department to inspect the grounds, despite that Safe Ground Sacramento agreed to the inspection, according to the statement.

Camp organizers were acting under the leadership of the Sacramento Homeless Union—a support organization that has been representing people at the site—whose actions were characterized by the city as “counterproductive interventions.”

Representatives for Safe Ground Sacramento and the Sacramento Homeless Union did not respond to a request for comment.

According to the city, Safe Ground Sacramento had hoped to create a model for other cities to follow. But the Sacramento Homeless Union was a hindrance, the city said, as organizers instructed camp residents to decline outreach services meant to direct them to permanent housing.

RVs used for shelter by homeless people in Sacramento near Camp Resolution, on June 17, 2024. (Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times)
RVs used for shelter by homeless people in Sacramento near Camp Resolution, on June 17, 2024. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times

The city accused the group of refusing to follow the terms of the lease agreement and of blocking city and social workers from entering to assist residents. The city added that the union also refused an offer to move the camp to a safer site last spring.

Since March 2024, the city has attempted to connect with Camp Resolution residents more than 60 times, the statement said.

“Unfortunately, Camp Resolution has proven to be a failed experiment, largely because of the counterproductive interventions from the Sacramento Homeless Union, which purports to represent the best interests of the people staying there,” officials said.

Sacramento outreach workers have successfully referred 10 people from the camp to city shelters or motels since the clearing and helped one person reunite with family, a city spokesperson told The Epoch Times.

The people evicted were offered shelter at the city’s Roseville Road Campus or its Outreach Engagement Center, where they would have access to temperature-controlled rooms, hot showers, bathrooms, and a case manager to help find permanent housing.

At the Roseville shelter, travel trailers or pallet homes are available, rather than congregate shelter, which the other location offers. Roseville shelter residents are allowed one pet per household, with some medical support and veterinary care for pets.

In total, 47 vehicles were towed from the camp, located at 2225 Colfax St., including 16 city-owned trailers, 12 cars, 16 other trailers or RVs, and three utility trailers, according to city spokesperson Julie Hall. Registered owners of the vehicles have been asked to work with the city’s police department and the tow companies to retrieve their vehicles or any belongings.

Hall said 11 dogs and three cats were taken to the Front Street Animal Shelter, and 76,200 pounds of scraps and 750 needles were also removed from the site.

Cleanup efforts are ongoing, Hall said.

The Sacramento Homeless Union said on Facebook that 44 of the 48 residents displaced are disabled, with one female resident needing constant electricity for her oxygen machine. She and a man who the group said takes care of her have been placed temporarily in a hotel.
Items near the old site of Camp Resolution after the homeless camp was swept the day before, on Aug. 27. (Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times)
Items near the old site of Camp Resolution after the homeless camp was swept the day before, on Aug. 27. Travis Gillmore/The Epoch Times